The Mail on Sunday

Council house ‘bribes’ for UK terror suspects

SECRET MI5-BACKED ‘OPERATION CONSTRAIN’ TO PERSUADE EXTREMISTS TO REJECT VIOLENCE

- By Abul Taher and Martin Beckford

TERROR suspects including jihadis returning from fighting in Syria are to be offered taxpayer-funded homes, counsellin­g and help finding jobs to stop them carrying out attacks in Britain.

The top-secret Government strategy, codenamed Operation Constrain, could even allow fanatics to jump to the top of council house waiting lists.

Official documents seen by The Mail on Sunday reveal that up to 20,000 extremists previously investigat­ed by MI5 will be targeted with what critics last night described as ‘bribes’ aimed at turning them away from extremism.

The highly contentiou­s nationwide programme is due to start next year, with police and cash-strapped councils hoping the Home Office will pay for it out of its £900 million counter-terrorism budget.

Last night, terrorism expert Professor Anthony Glees, of Buckingham University, said: ‘You can’t bribe people not to be terrorists.’ And Tory MP Andrew Bridgen added: ‘This sounds like a reward for being on a list of potential terrorists. You can’t buy people’s loyalty to this country.’

The move comes amid growing concern at the huge number of radical Islamists living in Britain who the security services are unable to track effectivel­y. Fanatics who had been under surveillan­ce by MI5 in the past were among the perpetra-

‘You can’t buy loyalty to this country’

tors of the two terror attacks in London and one in Manchester this year that left 35 people dead.

The intelligen­ce agencies fear as many as 20,000 former ‘subjects of interest’ – people who had been monitored but later dropped off the radar – could be plotting fresh atrocities. It is this group that will be targeted by the new scheme.

A fierce debate has also raged about how to deal with the estimated 360 battle-hardened jihadis who have returned to Britain after fighting with Islamic State in Syria and Iraq and the ones who may come back now after the fall of the so-called caliphate.

Terror law watchdog Max Hill QC caused a storm earlier this month when he said ‘ naïve’ teenagers should be allowed to reintegrat­e into society, while Foreign Office Minister Rory Stewart said most followers of IS’s ‘hateful doctrine’ posed a ‘serious danger’ to the UK and should be killed.

But the MoS can reveal that the Home Office, police and local authoritie­s have been secretly drawing up plans for a massive increase in attempts to turn vulnerable individual­s away from terrorism.

Under the existing deradicali­sation programme Prevent, teachers, doctors and social workers can refer people they fear may turn to extremism. The new Operation Constrain scheme, however, will involve police and social workers contacting people already on MI5’s databases to assess what danger they pose and what it would take to integrate them into society.

A Whitehall source said: ‘We are planning a number of pilots to explore the best way to diverting such people from terrorism and extremist activity.’

In hotspots for terror suspects such as Birmingham, Manchester and London, local police will be handed details of potential terrorists by counter- terrorism police and MI5 and will visit them in person. A local panel will then decide what interventi­ons could work.

If the extremists do not have suitable accommodat­ion, the council’s housing department will try to put them in social housing and may pay their rent if they are poor. They could also be given priority on waiting lists. If the terror suspect is unemployed or lacks qualificat­ions, they could be helped into education or training, then found a job with public bodies or charities.

And if they have mental health problems they will be referred to appropriat­e charities or the NHS.

Sources said the interventi­ons will mean police and Prevent officers being able to send back assessment­s about the risk the extremists pose.

But critics are likely to question the value of Operation Constrain, given that many known terrorists already enjoyed generous benefits or came from comfortabl­e background­s, even using state welfare payments to fund their plots.

The Home Office said: ‘We are reviewing our counter-terrorism strategy to make sure we respond to the evolving threat in the most effective way we can.’

AT ANY time it would be grotesque that allegiance to the homicidal creed of Islamic State might be rewarded with a helping hand in the housing queue.

But when hundreds of thousands of hard-working, law-abiding young families struggle to afford a roof over their heads, such a proposal is actually outrageous.

No doubt those in MI5 and the Home Office examining this plan have good intentions. But they have spent too long in the intense, dark world of counterter­rorism, and lost all sense of reality.

Material conditions may possibly influence some young people to turn towards the wilder forms of politics and religion, though much evidence suggests that the worst and most dangerous fanatics come from prosperous and well-educated background­s.

The shadowy zone from which so many violent killers come is much better explained by the lives of petty crime, drug abuse and listless drifting which so many of them have chosen to follow.

It is not that they are poor. It is that they are people who have grown used to transgress­ion, enjoy it and have repeatedly got away with it.

Rather than dreaming up schemes to appease them, which will probably make such people laugh with derision, the police and security services should be paying much more attention to catching and prosecutin­g them, so deterring them from this squalid and dangerous way of life.

In many cases, the only housing currently suitable for them is in Her Majesty’s prisons. If more of them were helped to find accommodat­ion under that particular roof, we might well see a reduction in the terror plague.

 ??  ?? ATROCITY: Westminste­r killer Khalid Masood surrounded by armed police
ATROCITY: Westminste­r killer Khalid Masood surrounded by armed police

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